(Image: YouTube live stream)

Two words you didn't hear at Google I/O today: security and privacy.

For reasons unknown to us, there wasn't a single highlight, feature, app, or functionality that revolved around security or privacy.

The transcript showed just one reference, which was one speaker inviting attendees to learn more about the security in Android P[1] at a "security session." But that was it.

It's bizarre, given that at Google I/O, the company's annual developer conference, Android always takes a front and center position. Given how vocal Google was earlier this year[2] about how focused it was on privacy and security in the upcoming Android P operating system, you'd think that there would be plenty to talk about.

Not the case, as it turns out.

It was even rumored that Google CEO Sundar Pichai was going to "send a message" to the company's billion-plus users about how it cares about people's privacy. Just days earlier, Microsoft's chief executive Satya Nadella said privacy was a "human right."[3][4]

We asked Google for comment prior to publication, but did not hear back. (We'll look forward to the belated boilerplate response about how Google "cares" about security and "values" privacy.)

You'd think in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, which embroiled Silicon Valley frenemy Facebook earlier this year, Google would've taken a strong position against the companies who use and abuse your personal data for money or influence.

The reality is that Google can't throw stones from the glass house it's in.

Facebook may have taken a beating in the past few months after 87 million users had their data collected by a shady firm linked with

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